Sweden drops neutrality and gets NATO’s first logistics base.
Credit: Dziurek, Shutterstock
Sweden has slammed the brakes on 200 years of military neutrality, and now it’s rolling out the welcome mat for NATO’s first-ever logistics hub on its soil.
Defence Minister Pål Jonson announced that the new base will be built in Enköping, northwest of Stockholm, with NATO planners already plotting how to move tanks, fuel, and ammunition across Northern Europe quicker than a Volvo down the E4 motorway.
‘NATO presence in Sweden strengthens our security and deterrence. The logistics centre assists the defence of NATO’s northern flank,’ Jonson said in a statement on Thursday.
From flat-pack furniture to flat-pack firepower
What IKEA did for wardrobes, NATO hopes Sweden will now do for war supplies. The site will start small – about 70 personnel in peacetime – but in the event of crisis or all-out war, it could balloon to 160 staff, coordinating a military assembly line of troops, fuel, spare parts and heavy weaponry.
Jonson told public broadcaster SVT the base’s job would be to “transport large amounts of equipment and personnel across Swedish territory,” ensuring NATO forces can shuffle soldiers and hardware with speed if Russia turns up the pressure in the region.
Why it matters
This isn’t just about bricks and mortar, it’s about history. Sweden, once fiercely proud of sitting on the sidelines, ditched its centuries-old stance of military non-alignment after Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine. It formally became NATO’s 32nd member in March 2024.
Now, just over a year later, Stockholm is hosting one of NATO’s most crucial backroom operations – a move that sends a crystal-clear message to Moscow.
What happens next
Sweden’s armed forces have been tasked with getting the headquarters fully operational by the end of 2027. Until then, the construction cranes and military planners will be working hand in glove to make sure Sweden isn’t just a new member of NATO, but a cornerstone of its northern defences.
Or, as NATO might put it: flat-pack neutrality is out. Flat-pack logistics is in.
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